Smith v. Commissioners of Lexington

97 S.E. 378, 176 N.C. 466, 1918 N.C. LEXIS 273
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 20, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 97 S.E. 378 (Smith v. Commissioners of Lexington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Commissioners of Lexington, 97 S.E. 378, 176 N.C. 466, 1918 N.C. LEXIS 273 (N.C. 1918).

Opinion

Clark, C. J.

The plaintiff’s intestate was assisting in putting machinery in the Chero-Cola plant at Lexington for operation, it being a new plant, and at the time he was sitting on a large metal-covered machine waiting for a change to be made in a gas tube. In getting down from the machine he took hold of an electric socket, which had been put in by the defendant and which was hanging over his lap, to push it out of the way, and received the deadly current which instantly killed him. The electric power and light fixtures had been installed by the town of Lexington some ten days before. There had been practically no bottling done up to that time and the lights had been turned on for the first time less than an hour before the plaintiff’s intestate was killed. There was a large machine — some 6 feet long, 6 feet high, and 4 feet wide — partially filled with water, known as the “soaker.” The electric light was hung over the soaker, and there was no practicable way to get to the socket except by getting on the machine or of standing on the floor on tiptoe and reaching the socket by leaning against the soaker. There was evidence that the voltage was about 220, which could have been on the droplight and socket at the time of the death, even if there had been no cement or damp floor, which was-shown in the evidence. There was evidence that the Chero-Cola Company asked defendant to put in a current of 110 volts, and it protested against any higher voltage. The plaintiff put on evidence that this-protest was not because of danger anticipated, but because so heavy a voltage burned out the lights too rapidly.

The plaintiff alleged three causes of negligence:

(1) That the use of a defective and unsafe socket with defective insulation.

(2) That the defendant negligently failed to furnish a lower and safe voltage after demand.

(3) That the defendant, through a defective transformer and defective appliances, allowed an excessive, dangerous and high current to be-used, which caused the death of the intestate.

The defendant denied the negligence, pleaded contributory negligence on the part of the intestate and ultra vires, in that the town exceeded its powers in putting in private power and lights.

The intestate was a son of the owner of the building, which he had used for a garage and which had been wired some years for lights and *469 power. At the time of his death, the intestate was an employee of the Chero-Cola Bottling Company, its manager was his brother, and the vice-president of the company his brother-in-law.

Some weeks before the death of the plaintiff’s intestate and before the machinery for the bottling plant was placed, the bottling company induced the town to change the wiring of the building and directed where the lights were to be placed and their arrangement. The employees of the town furnished the wire, cords, rosettes, and sockets, and the bottling company accepted and paid for the work. The electric bulbs were purchased by the bottling company, which put them in itself. The building was wired for lights and power, for a current of 220 volts. The lamp at which the plaintiff’s intestate was killed was placed under the direction of his employer, the Chero-Cola Company, one of them being this' light over the front end of the soaker, and two or three feet above it, hanging from the ceiling and placed there for the use and the operation of the machine. There was a shaft over the soaker with a pulley, over which a belt ran. When this belt came off the employees would go up on the soaker and put on the belt. The manager of the Chero-Cola plant and another stood on the soaker just a few minutes before the intestate was killed, and the latter held up the light to help in- putting the belt back on the pulley, and received no shock. It was in evidence that the intestate got up on the soaker to fix the belt and then sat down on the end of the soaker, and, taking hold of the lamp as he got up, received the current that killed him, by making a circuit.

The first assignment of error is that the court sustained the defendant’s objection to a question put to the plaintiff’s witness as to the work done by him while not in the employment of the town after the boy was killed. This cannot be sustained.

The second assignment of error is that when the same witness was asked, “In your opinion, what amount of voltage was probably the cause of his death?” the defendant objected, and the court said, “I think it would be competent to ask him what is the amount of voltage which would produce death? But as to the amount that was the cause of his death, how could he know the probable amount of the current?”

We do not think that this was any expression of the judge’s opinion, upon the facts, which is the ground assigned for the objection. Besides, this last exception was not taken at the time and could not be considered. If taken at the time, the court could have explained to the jury that he was not expressing any opinion as to the weight of the evidence. Bloxham v. Timber Corporation, 172 N. C., 37; Harrison v. Dill, 169 N. C., 542.

This witness was also asked if he had any opinion as to the amount *470 of voltage that did kill the intestate, to which he replied: “In my opinion, in this special case, taking into consideration the room as it shows there, there is nothing less than 500 to 800 that went through his body.” On objection by defendant, this testimony was properly excluded. Kerner v. R. R., 170 N. C., 94. This seems to have been the opinion of the witness from the evidence, taking into consideration the room and other surroundings. It was the province of the jury to pass upon the evidence and form a conclusion, and not for the witness. Kerner v. R. R., 170 N. C., 94; Gray v. R. R., 167 N. C., 433.

Assignments of error 4, 5, 6, and 7 were presented together and were all based upon the court excluding questions of the same nature, upon objection by the defendant. These questions were:

“Regardless of lights, what kind of a socket should be used on a 220 current in a building with a cement floor, as a bottling plant, where a metal soaker and other bodies are sitting?”
“Was the use of a brass socket over the soaker at the place, in your opinion, proper protection of human life?”
“What kind of a socket should have been used, under the circumstances, in the Chero-Cola Bottling Plant for the protection of human life?”
“In your opinion, would the use of a brass socket in the plant.in which the intestate was killed having a cement floor, if the jury should so find, and the jury should further find that it was hung over a metal machine, or soaker, state, in your opinion, what kind of socket, whether metal or porcelain, or otherwise, should have been Used in the protection of human life ?”

These were properly excluded because the opinion of the expert upon a hypothetical state of facts was not asked for, but the witness was asked to give his own conclusion as to one of the very matters at issúe before the jury and was asked to set his own standard as to what should be done.

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Bluebook (online)
97 S.E. 378, 176 N.C. 466, 1918 N.C. LEXIS 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-commissioners-of-lexington-nc-1918.